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Cognitive-behavioral interventions for preventing youth gang violence involvement for children and young people (7-16) / Herrick Fisher, Paul Montgomery, Frances Gardner.

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Location

Canadian Policing Research

Resource

e-Books

Authors

Publishers

Bibliography

Includes bibliographical references (pages 16-24).

Description

1 online resource (35 pages)

Note

Author(s) affiliated with: The Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention, University of Oxford.

Summary

"Many studies document a robust and consistent relationship between gang membership and elevated delinquency, with gang members disproportionately involved in crime compared to non-gang peers. Research also indicates that both delinquent youth and youth who join gangs often show a wide range of deficient or distorted social-cognitive processes compared to non-delinquent peers. Cognitive-behavioural interventions are designed to address cognitive deficits in order to reduce maladaptive or dysfunctional behaviour, and studies have documented their positive impact on a number of behavioural and psychological disorders among children and youth."--Page 3.

Subject

Online Access

Series

Campbell systematic reviews (The Campbell Collaboration), 1891-1803 ; 2008:7.

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